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LIBERIA: Government, women's groups
decry post-war sexual violence
January 15, 2007 (IRIN/PLUSNEWS) - Rising levels
of reported rape and sexual exploitation of women and teenage girls
in Liberia have sparked concern by both the government and women's
rights groups. Despite a peace agreement in 2003 that ended the
particularly brutal 14-year civil war, during which fighters sexually
assaulted girls and women and sometimes used them as "sex slaves",
these types of violent abuse were still common, according to Lois
Bruthus, head of the Association of Female Lawyers of Liberia (AFELL),
a leading advocacy group."The raping of girls and women is
a major problem ... we have been trying to curtail [these attacks],
but it still continues," Bruthus told IRIN/PlusNews. Strong
anti-rape legislation is in place, but women's groups have charged
that a weak court system was hampering rape convictions.
Children targeted
Local media report at least two incidents of the rape of girls as
young as five years of age every week, and a recent study at a hospital
in the capital, Monrovia, by international medical charity Medecins
Sans Frontieres (MSF), showed that teenage girls were more exposed
to rape in the capital. An estimated 85 percent of the 658 rape
survivors reporting to the hospital were aged under 18, while 48
percent were aged between 5 and 12 years. "In more than 90
percent of the cases involving children, they were raped by someone
they knew," MSF said. Antoinette Nebo, a community leader in
West Point, one of Monrovia's slums, confirmed that sexual offenders,
who were usually in their forties, often targeted "baby girls".
She said poverty was the main reason why girls were being raped.
"They [cash-strapped parents] sometimes extort money from the
perpetrators to privately settle the case without going through
the courts system. It is a shared act of total wickedness by heartless
persons to rape our young girls, and most of the victims' parents
or guardians are ... [complicit in] rape cases."
Liberia has an unemployment rate of 85 percent
and is one of the world's poorest countries, with most of the population
living on less than US$1 a day, according to the World Development
Index. The growing trend towards transactional sex between older,
financially stable men and young women and even younger girls has
drawn the attention of President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, who issued
a warning to rape perpetrators in December 2006.
"To those of you who are privileged or attained
successes in businesses and are in our communities, and to those
of you who represent the international community, I urge you not
to use your wealth and power to sexually exploit children and women.
It is an unacceptable behaviour, and a major challenge currently
facing all of us," the president said.
Massive outreach to prevent sexual exploitation
Gender Affairs Minister Vabah Gayflor also expressed concern over
the growing incidence of sexual offences during the recent launch
of a joint one-year anti-rape campaign by the government and the
United Nations (UN). "Sexual exploitation is becoming another
major problem for [our] women; we are increasingly hearing of girls
being forced by wealthy men into exchanging sex for material gain,"
Gayflor charged. The campaign, which carries the central messages
of: 'No sex for help. No help for sex. Sex is not a requirement
for jobs, grades, medical treatment or other services', aims to
empower women and girls against sexual abuse.
Amelia Tucker, a women's rights advocate in the
town of Kakata, 45km north of the capital, said sexual exploitation
was taking place in schools and places of work. "In November
[2006], a girl reported that a school teacher had demanded sex from
her in exchange for better grades in a school examination that she
could not attend due to illness. When we confronted this gentleman,
he denied the allegations." She has called for policies similar
to those of the anti-rape law to be put place in order to root out
offenders.
Weak court systems hamper the fight against
rape
In terms of the law, raping a minor carries a life sentence, with
the suspects denied bail. But with rape cases steadily climbing
in the country, AFELL activists have been concerned that the law
only worked on paper. Bruthus has recommended that a specialised
rape court be established to help address the problem, and charged
that the judicial system was failing in its duties. Her sentiments
were reflected in an official five-year 'National Gender-based Violence
Plan of Action', which read: "Perpetrators go unpunished or
receive light sentences, few survivors report cases, and law enforcement
is known for treating survivors poorly." Only two people have
received life sentences since the law was enacted.
From: http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57065&SelectRegion=West_Africa&SelectCountry=LIBERIA
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